Chicago Sun-Times

Fassbender’s Steve Jobs is shaped by an inner struggle

Series is definitely a risk worth taking

- ROBERT BIANCO

If this is Crazy, maybe the other networks need to go a little nuts.

Considerin­g what a non- starter the season has been so far, it’s not as if they have a lot to lose. There are a few time slot successes, but no new show has really broken through the cultural clutter — which is what you might expect when most of them either look like something you’re already watching or something you’ve already rejected.

But not CW’s Crazy Ex- Girlfriend, ( Monday, 8 p. m. ET/ PT), fall’s best new series and easily its most unusual. A story of one obsessive woman’s unlikely search for love and happiness as told through song and dance, Crazy is an outofthe- blue surprise and an out- of- thebox treasure. It shows what the networks can do when they’re willing to throw caution to the wind and turn to something and someone new — in this case, star and writer Rachel Bloom and the show’s creator, Aline Brosh McKenna ( The Devil Wears Prada).

Bloom plays Rebecca, a successful New York lawyer who finds herself fixating on the last time she was happy: as a teenager at summer camp, dating hunky young Josh ( Vincent Rodriguez III). A chance encounter with Josh leads her to a not- exactly- inevitable conclusion: She must uproot her life and follow him to West Covina, Calif. (“Only two hours from the beach— four in traffic.”)

Don’t worry about rememberin­g West Covina. The name will be seared into your brain by the end of the show’s first production number, a Disneyesqu­e salute to small- town virtues that is both catchy and subversive­ly funny, and which Bloom puts across like a seasoned musical pro. None of which, by the way, will come as a surprise to those who know her as an Internet comedy- song sensation.

Alas, West Covina is not exactly the paradise Rebecca had hoped for. True, there is the sweet bartender ( Santino Fontana) who takes a shine to her. (“You’re pretty and you’re smart and you’re ignoring me, so you’re obviously my type.”) But there’s also her boss, who has a thing about Jews, and the firm’s head paralegal ( Donna Lynne Champlin, who could be one of the year’s breakouts), determined to find out what Rebecca is hiding.

Through it all, Bloom sparkles, alternatel­y reasonable and clueless as she leads us to the show’s underlying universal truth: Love can be destabiliz­ing. You’ll spot bits of Tina Fey in her performanc­e, and some of Amy Schumer, particular­ly in the satirical “Sexy Getting Ready Song.” But the final blend is all Bloom’s.

As with Rebecca, the road Bloom has chosen is a risky one. ( Just ask the folks at Smash how hard it is to stage an original musical number every week.) But it seems to be a risk worth taking.

And if that makes me crazy, so be it.

 ?? EDDY CHEN, CW ?? Rebecca ( Rachel Bloom, right), Paula ( Donna Lynne Champlin) and a chorus of other characters populate Crazy Ex- Girlfriend.
EDDY CHEN, CW Rebecca ( Rachel Bloom, right), Paula ( Donna Lynne Champlin) and a chorus of other characters populate Crazy Ex- Girlfriend.

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